All of your due dates will be listed on the board in class as well as posted on this website by subject!!. Please observe due dates and make sure that you are looking at the correct course. There will be no late homework accepted without extenuating circumstances.

IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS; Please contact me on my school email address RHefele@Dracutps.org. I will not respond to comments left on this site as they are public.

US II:

Guided Readings (Available under US II Guided Readings heading and answers can be found in your online textbook)

Interactive notebooks: To be done in class unless you are absent. Please check back here to see if you have missed anything.

M.A.I.N causes of WWI.

The Great War Video.

Life in the Trenches.

Review Sheets

In Class at the end of each chapter

Quizes: As announced.

Test:

Week of 12/13

Other Assignments:

CIVIL RIGHTS WEBSITE PROJECT PRESENTATIONS BEGIN:

SOCIOLOGY: Please use your online textbook and the internet to answer the questions in your guided readings.

Guided Readings:

11.1- 11/30

11.2 – 12/4

11.3 – 12/7

11.4 – 12/11

11.5 – 12/15

Activities: Movies plus worksheets

A Class Divided

How Racist Are You

Rabbit Proof Fence

Crash

School Ties

Race in America

Test: There is no written test for chapter 11

Textbook is online

Capstone Project Due:

AP Euro:

Primary Sources: Scientific Revolution and Enlightenment

These are not consecutive Chapters. I believe it’s 14 & 17 in your primary source text

The Scientific Revolution:

Letter to Christina of Tuscany: Science and Scripture

The Papal Inquisition of 1633: Galileo Condemned

Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy

The Enlightenment:

What is Enlightenment

Prospectus for the Encyclopedia of Arts and Sciences

Philosophical Dictionary

Vindication of the Rights of Women

The Age of Reason: Deism

The Social Contract

Secondary Sources/Visual Sources

Scientific Revolution

No Scientific Revolution for Women

Enlightenment

Propaganda and the Enlightened Monarch

Women in Salons

The Problem of Enlightened Absolutism

Answer questions 1, 3, 4, and 6 on paper. Short answer format answering all parts of the question and siting the sources as you go. Then go to the chalkup.co site and discuss questions 2 and 5:

What were the main ways in which the science of the 17th century constituted a break form the past? What were some of the main problems facing 17th century scientists in making this break? How did they handle this?

How would you explain the occurrence of the Scientific revolution in the 17th century instead of the 16th or 18th?

What core of ideas and attitudes most clearly connects Enlightenment thinkers as revealed in these sources? How do these ideas relate to 18th century society and institutions

What policies would an 18th century ruler have to pursue to fit the the greatest degree the ideas and assumptions of Enlightenment thinkers?What stood in the way of some monarchs who wanted to be more enlightened?

What attitudes and ideas of enlightenment thinkers do you think remain valid for the problems facing today’s world? What enlightenment ideas an attitudes no longer seem valid or appropriate/

In what ways to the sources support the argument that together, the Scientific Revolution and the Enlightenment constitute a single intellectual revolution of great long-term significance?

(A GOOD DISCUSSION WILL INVOLVE MULTIPLE RESPONSES TO EACH PROMPT AND A CONVERSATION AMONGST YOU AND YOUR CLASSMATES. THIS MEANS YOU’RE GOING TO HAVE TO GO BACK AND CHECK FOR REPLIES.)

Please refer to your class syllabus for due dates, readings, and expectations. You will get one per every two months/two chapters.